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7 days
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7 DAYS THROUGH MALLORCA
Impossible coves, mountain roads and tourists convinced they’ve found “the secret beach”
Mallorca is an island that can combine turquoise coves, stone villages high in the mountains and cities with deep Mediterranean heritage in a surprisingly compact territory. Beyond the postcard image of beach and peak season alone, the island offers a strong mix of nature, food, panoramic roads and historic fabric. From Palma to the Serra de Tramuntana, Mallorca alternates elegant quarters, fishing harbours, dramatic viewpoints and small communities where the rhythm shifts completely from the busiest resort strips.
One of Mallorca’s great strengths is how fast landscape and atmosphere change across a few kilometres. In one trip you can thread hidden coves, wander villages such as Valldemossa or Sóller, drive mountain roads above the Mediterranean and still finish with dinner by the sea. The island balances relaxation, active travel, culture and local gastronomy—making it far more varied and complete than many people expect before they arrive.
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This seven-day Mallorca plan opens in Palma on foot: land, drop bags, thread the historic core around the cathedral, eat nearby and keep the waterfront light—Lonja or the seafront strip. Pick up the hire car late on day one or on morning two; skipping a beach sprint on arrival is the simplest way to keep the week’s rhythm honest.
Day two finishes Palma without turning it into a civil-service exam, then pushes to Valldemossa with an early lunch window; add Deià only if the schedule still feels clean, otherwise you slip straight into your Tramuntana base. Valldemossa fills fast—half a day there is usually a gift you can’t afford.
Day three is Serra de Tramuntana discipline: panoramic road early, a few chosen viewpoints, one well-picked village beat and a quiet afternoon at base—no tour of look-alike hamlets and no default Sa Calobra marathon. The east crossing uses the interior (Sineu by default, Petra if it suits) for check-in around Santanyí / Cala d’Or / Porto Cristo with one easy cove or a short walk—transition day, not a flex.
The southeast block keeps one main cove at dawn; add a second only if you still have clean margins—never four coves in one sunscreen stunt. Day six picks one headline piece—caves early if they truly matter, otherwise another quiet dawn cove—then real rest. Day seven closes around your flight (Palma or the east): sleep in Palma the night before an early departure; the last day is protected, not squeezed. Complete purchase, choose your language at checkout, and download before you lock bases and transfers blind.
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